Pakistan has an amazing metalworking culture considering the fabricating handicaps they have to overcome to get any work done at all. That this fellow offers himself as a surgical instrument maker is interesting. I could suggest that physicians would have some serious input into the quality of the tools he made for them since their business is more in the life and death arena if the tool does not perform.

I will say "perhaps", mostly because there are so many things I don't know about the manufacturing that lend a better opinion. Today, I am with the rest of the opinions on this one. Generally, for sharp things, Pakistani blades have not been up to standards for what could normally be expected. They replicate very well, but do not perform very well. This includes their pattern welded steels too.

Now, some of the Pakistani makers are on the various forums looking for feedback. They do have the capability of changing their methods, changing their steels and will produce an acceptable product for the rest of the world market if they are motivated to do so. So there can be exceptions and the only way to find these exceptions is to test the product.

The relative value of even a very good (I know it's an oxymoron) Pakistani razor would still be so far below what is normally available in the modern razor market from reputable suppliers that it would undercut business. It's no different really than any other cheap razor manufacturer. They want to make pennies on a blade and sell a lot of them rather than put effort into making a generational razor that they will sell a few and wait to grow the market based on reputation rather than quantity.

Caveat emptor